La Revue de médecine interne
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Case Reports
Muscular pseudotumor revealing a mycobacterial granuloma after bacillus Calmette-Guérin therapy.
The Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) is a live attenuated strain of Mycobacterium bovis. Intravesical therapy with BCG has long been proved to be effective in treating early-stage bladder carcinoma. ⋯ Mycobacterial infection should be carefully screened face to a granuloma presenting as muscular pseudotumor. A history of BCG therapy, even decades earlier, enhances this hypothesis and should lead to enforce microbiological testing, especially molecular test.
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Innate immunity, and more specifically the complement system, has arised renewed interest in the medical field in recent years. Many innovative complement-inhibiting drugs have appeared, acting at various levels of the complement cascade. These drugs have made it possible to transform poor prognosis of certain diseases. ⋯ It then discusses the diseases in which the complement is involved on the pathophysiological level. The third part details the different classes of complement inhibitors and briefly recalls the indications for which these treatments seem the most promising. Finally, we end with a discussion that highlights the different aspects and questions induced by these new treatments.
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Clinicians are sometimes confronted with the diagnostic difficulties of the idiopathic form of Castleman's Disease (iMCD). As this review reports with demonstrative clinical cases, iMCD can mimic various serious systemic pathologies such as certain autoimmune diseases, Still's disease, POEMS syndrome, and malignant lymphoproliferations, sharing a very similar histology and identical symptoms. To make a diagnosis of iMCD, the clinician must eliminate all the pathologies mentioned above, but he must first think of it and evoke this diagnosis of rare disease before the first symptoms but also know how to evoke this diagnosis again even after several years of evolution of a disease like those mentioned above whose evolution is not favorable. © 2022 Published by Elsevier Masson SAS on behalf of Société nationale française de médecine interne (SNFMI).
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Histologically, Castleman's disease associates three subtypes: 1-the vascular hyaline (HV) subtype more often seen in unicentric forms; 2-the plasmacytic (PV) subtype, more frequently associated with the HHV8+ and idiopathic multicentric form; 3-the mixed subtype associating both HV and PV aspects that may be encountered in any type of Castleman's disease. If the diagnosis of unicentric (isolated mass) and multicentric HHV8+ Castleman's disease is easy, the diagnosis of the idiopathic multicentric form remains particularly difficult because it is at the crossroads of many other pathologies (infectious, tumoral and dysimmune), making an anatomoclinical comparison necessary. The role of the pathologist, in the context of disseminated lesions (polyadenopathy and splenomegaly), is to identify lesions that may be part of Castleman's disease, to systematically perform HHV8 testing and to perform complete phenotyping associated with molecular analysis (B and T-cell clonality) in order to rule out a lymphomatous process and certain infectious etilogies. In all cases, its role will be a warning bell and the diagnosis of Castleman's disease will be retained only after a rigorous anatomic and clinical confrontation. © 2022 Published by Elsevier Masson SAS on behalf of Société nationale française de médecine interne (SNFMI).
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Castleman disease is a group of rare disorders characterized by lymph node enlargement, specific microscopic changes to the lymph nodes, and a broad range of symptoms and laboratory findings. The two main subtypes are unicentric Castleman disease (UCD) and multicentric Castleman disease (MCD). The multicentric subtype can be further classified into two categories: HHV-8 positive multicentric Castleman disease and idiopathic multicentric Castleman disease (iMCD). ⋯ Approximately 75 percent were estimated to be unicentric CD and the remaining 25 percent were estimated to be split between HHV-8-associated MCD or HHV-8-negative/idiopathic MCD. Diagnostic criteria for iMCD have been established by an international working group of pediatric and adult pathology and clinical experts. The proposed consensus criteria require characteristic histopathologic findings on lymph node biopsy, enlargement of multiple lymph node regions, the presence of multiple clinical and laboratory abnormalities, and the exclusion of infectious, malignant, and autoimmune disorders that can mimic iMCD. © 2022 Published by Elsevier Masson SAS on behalf of Société nationale française de médecine interne (SNFMI).